Maybe not in
raw SoC speed, but in practical use.
Not exact matches
It very much seems that dual core Cortex A9
SOCs will be at - least on - par with the Pine View N450 Atom, performance wise, and possibly overpower them by 50 - 80 % in
raw processing power.
However, it remains to be seen how it would compete with the Snapdragon 835
SoC from Qualcomm, the upcoming Kirin 970 chipset from Huawei, and the Apple A10 Fusion chipset in terms of
raw performance.
Qualcomm isn't only recognized as the undisputed heavyweight champion of smartphone
SoCs these days due to the
raw performance of its custom Kryo CPU cores and Adreno GPU comprising the Snapdragon 820 silicon, but also thanks to Quick Charge 3.0 technology.
On the bright side, the Huawei Kirin 960
SoC also makes use of ARM's cutting - edge Mali - G71 MP8 graphics chip, delivering 80 percent more
raw speed than the previous - gen Mali - T880 MP4.
The Galaxy S8 Mini is also said to be a slight downgrade compared to the original models in terms of
raw processing power, with the device being rumored to feature the Snapdragon 821, Qualcomm's 2016 system - on - chip (
SoC) powering the likes of the Google Pixel, Pixel XL, HTC U Ultra, and the LG G6.
This iPhone 8 Plus is also straight out a winner in the
raw compute power race this time, powered by the new custom designed Apple A11 Bionic, and this is godly power when you pit it against the best from other
SoC manufacturers.
When it comes to
raw processing power, the OnePlus 5 uses the Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 octa - core
SoC clocked at 2.45 GHz.